GLORIA STERN, Plaintiff, v FOUR POINTS BY SHERATON ANN ARBOR HOTEL et al., Defendants. GLORIA STERN, Appellant, v Z.L.C., INC., Doing Business as SHERATON INN ANN ARBOR, et al., Respondents.
Supreme Court, New York County
September 5, 2013
19 N.Y.S.3d 289
Anil Singh, J.
Plaintiff alleges that, while in New York, she reserved a room at the Sheraton Inn Ann Arbor in Ann Arbor, Michigan using an interactive website maintained by Starwood Hotels and Resorts Worldwide, Inc. for Sheraton hotels. During her stay at the Sheraton Inn hotel, which was then owned by defendant ZLC, plaintiff tripped over a walkway in the hotel lobby and fractured her knee. In support of its motion to dismiss, defendant ZLC, a Michigan corporation, submitted evidence that, at the time of the accident, it used the trademark name “Sheraton” pursuant to a license agreement, but had no other hotels and no bank accounts, real estate or other contacts with New York.
Although ZLC‘s participation in the interactive website for Sheraton hotels may demonstrate that it transacted business in New York, the relationship between ZLC‘s website activities and plaintiff‘s negligence action arising from an allegedly defective condition of premises in Michigan is too remote to support the exercise of long-arm or specific jurisdiction under
Since plaintiff has not shown that facts may exist to support the exercise of personal jurisdiction over ZLC with respect to her claim arising from a trip-and-fall accident in Michigan, ZLC‘s motion to dismiss was properly granted without providing plaintiff an opportunity to engage in jurisdictional discovery (see Peterson v Spartan Indus., 33 NY2d 463, 467 [1974]; Mejia-Haffner v Killington, Ltd., 119 AD3d at 915).
Concur—Friedman, J.P., Sweeny, Renwick, Andrias and Moskowitz, JJ. [Prior Case History: 2013 NY Slip Op 32091(U).]
